SUNDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1934 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE ; PAGE FIVE South Places Five Men On Associated Press All-American t;; Only Two From Big Ten Named On Honor Team Pug Lund Is Listed For Second Time; Larsor Also On First Team Alabama Has Two Fighting Navy Gridders Topple Cadets In Mud, 3_To 0 Ward Receives Honorabke Mention As End; Line Is Heavy_ By ALAN GOULD (Associated Press Sports Editor) NEW YORK, Dec. 1. - (A) - Th University of Minnesota's all-con- quering football forces have a copper rivet9d claim to the mythical nationa college championship of 1934, but not even this super-array of gridiror talent proved equal to the job of try- ing to keep this year's gridiron heroes of the far-flung Southern battlefront from displacing the Middle West a the leading producer of All-America players. For the first time since Walter Camp popularized the annual all- star argument, way back in the "ele- gant eighties," the South leads all other main sections of the country in placing its favorites on the All- America team. The territory stretching from the Carolinas to the wide open ranges of Texas contributes five of the 11 stal- warts named today for .college foot- ball's, highest award in the tenth annual Associated Press consensus se- lections The South's most formidable grid- iron machine, Alabama, shares the first team honors with Minesota and Stanford each placing two men, while Texas Christian, Rice Institute and North Carolina contribute the remain- ing three representatives of Dixie's gallant gridiron forces. Rest Evenly Divided This compares with two places on the first team each for the East, Middle West and Far West. It is a sharp contrast with the All-America situation of the last four years, in each of. which the Middle West has been the dominating contributor of all-star talent. The easily apparent explanation is that while Minnesota has produced one of the great -teams of modern times, with Ohio State another po- tent factor, the rest of the Middle- ''western "Old Guard" has fallen off considerably. Michigan, Nebraska, Northwestern and Notre Dame,which among them have turned out at least a score of All-America stars in the past 10 years, all have had sub- normal seasons, speaking compara- tively. In the case of the Wolverines, who have rarely missed a year with at least one representative in the All- America parade, they have just fin- ished the most disastrous campaign in the history of football at Anne Arbor. Lund, Larson Unanimous ; Under the circumstances, Minne- sota's display of power and ability has been all the more conspicuous. It is no surprise to find the experts giving something like unanimous All- America rating to Captain Francis (Pug) Lund, backfield ace and spark- plug of the team, as well as to Frank (Butch) Larson, brilliant left end. Both overcame the handicap of in- juries to close out remarkable careers. To their teammates, Bill Bevan, a spectacular guard, and Stan Kostka, batering-ram fullback, go the honors of places on the second or alternate all-star array but the names of these four by no means complete the roll of outstanding talent on the Gopher steam-roller.l It is one of the main regrets of1 a remarkable college gridiron seasont that this super-aggregation from the adopted land of the Vikings could not try conclusions with either Alabama or Stanford, the two other principle undefeated teams in major leagueE competition and prospective oppo- I nents in the forthcoming Rose Bowlt classic, New Year's Day. Pittsburgh,i although beaten by Minnesota's last- period rally in the only close match played by the Gophers, completes a national "ig Four" for the 1934 sea-r ron and it is natural enough to find c the Panthers also contributing threeI men to the combined all-star line- ups.z MINNESOTA TOUGHc Indiana football teams have beatenc Minnesota but once in 12 games - in 1920, 21 to 7. Two of the games havec ended in ties. ____---- - v STIAR DL A LAN GOULD today presents what he and his board of experts think is the 1934 All-America. Last night' "Red" Grange presented his selec- tions over the radio. The United Press bestowed its laurel wreath on 11 immortals several days ago. In two weeks or so Collier's All-Amer-{ ican Board will issue its edict. Ever since a year ago when Mr. Gould failed to place Whitey Wistert on his first team we h'ave been a lit- tle suspicious of his judgment. Any criticism of any one All-America eleven can be justified on the grounds{ that this or that person picked three or four different players.- ByART JS TCARS'TENS been selected to participate in the Tournament of Roses games and their records there are self-explanatory. Michigan this year can attest to the high calibre of Southern! football, for in three instances in 1934 coaches fresh from football below the Mason-Dixon line con- tributed to the Wolverine's hu- miliation. Charlie Bachman, two years removed from'Florida, Ber- nie Bierman, three years from Tulane and producer of a Nation- al championship team at Minne- -- - - anat Fr nnnic U hmidt in hie I Associated Press All-American Roll FIRST TEAM Ht., End, Larson, Minn.. ....6:03 Tackle, Lee, Alabama . .6:02 Guard, Hartwig, Pitt. ..6:01 Center, Lester, Tex. Chr. 6:04 Guard, Barclay, N. C. . .5:11 Tackle, Reynolds, Stan. .6:03 End, Hutson, Alabama .6:00 Q'back, Grayson, Stan. .5:11 II'back, Borries, Navy . .6:00 H'back, Wallace, Rice ..5:11 F'back, Lund, Minn. ....5:11 SECOND TEAM James Moscrip, Stanford .... James Steen, Syracuse . . . . T William Bevan, Minn.....G John J. Robinson, N. D. .. C Rcgs Monahar, Ohio S..... G1 Joseph Ferrara, Columbia . T Lester Borden, Fordham .... Arleigh Will ams, Calif. . .Q Wgt. 182 222 182 215 185 220 191 186 175 185 185 .End ackle ,uard enter ;uard ackle .End 'back HARLES .... H NT O 'Ttn UtWs hinofo Stt DEROTDe. -(/ -Clsig al w i wh':ipped: inte ;:ritent: UDON hi s collgaegi aerirlin snwfure costefed t Fr o ofABAMA DetroitT":stoa^6t 0e o I Squad Of Ten Gead ora bor deesewich TWtatsrUpsnvadesscguld noate cnit Prepres For etycak De eTsSIakng possssio on a n th DETROIT Dec. - (/P -Cening mwinhtpes, Deritrput tt hiscolegategri__ree_ i brll tonwhurichsrads the itan ln stye, ougNot ld te Uivesit almost twith aurte paied faed oweyi Pies S oing-ld thress Candra enah. time ta- OfctHyligryer An he o arncet ba fo the Ttas 45aer t than2,00 fas shvere inthe ther aters -ard arer.henroduod In Pactce essins st gampaso toucogdownk, and herom- Ten members ofmthenMichiganthock-ehauledpdown eysquad l do Mai en Bl e ntdn offsde or p enalty put the o outfis Tusdaynigh reay fo ac-ternd onaesia qouar tercki- tio agins te EsexFrotirs f sep arn d sesin ton ut the Nt ti i. smasn hedh toa the 5,itwer Johne Ahbgiteitg otehece nded fo thrie ned 194-5reasn OrfeSSn thetnforfovrr thses toucdon wich wa tod year' exeriece bhindthemnfo the xta po was grouned.to Jonny igr n Sherfwledteta i-fth, tater M-agnu mrketrnTe Nott tN atonShe teD stipt from the Stga 32nd the De- andJewll s gale. on ac~l-troit 33ak gon oe2 beauflrun bingic Tund mLmary Dai the defeignseo- hetwc reesdhsfed mTnitse ohetW etra-onSta e hiso lega tte Escaeer rintir s o wplurriue ndcr oss the el. 7 o therstarting linthep Dict eerWy eazofkNeeded acurtesting of34-trostasnsfthea 6toe nteor-of le tothe ouardownall.cheasito at vie Heygerto u sphoors, an vctory ones'ratestpas wa bexeifn e aerdine the ear f th e r o ive w hshg rou ed 1 J1 nn -er -- --"d-h am- fIrth afersMo gnusro u nedfNomt' to cmplet ther ste f igpn fo h tt oteD- an Jewqu a sgO fl T eD n c -that ime33onatheaDetritlevnen pre-h Asm sndar Coa L threy dsalter w e d CoutetisnGilerc aouhdrnotEdonuisi- an, ar the phase tws, Eran Bil. Ithean lspic Bpriorymoothe gameinwhichuwasheldrlastpnightoat the Cois eme, ochLwr hadphirs, fist lie oppoing the fo rst erfe Consierable sped Maand srappi were t the keynotso ths ndrill, Inre th atPraie printhee assadrnec iet xvith Sherf and Heyliger prominent in the former, and David in the latter S department. Heyliger is the sensation so far. i nt 2 r Developing from a good player as he was when he arrived, he has picked up speed and facility in handling the puck, and his shots at the goal keep the corner warm for Captain Jewell. Solo dashes by Sherf and Heyliger, as well as an effective passing attack between the two, should constitute the main part of the Wolverines' of- fensive. Thegame Tuesday night is sched- uled for 8 p.m. Admission will be 35 cents for students and faculty, - members with athletic coupon books, while the general admission price has been set at 75 cents. Cutter's Kick Wins As Buzz Borries Stars Victory In Annual Classic Is First For Midshipmen Since 1921 PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 1- (R) - Navy outfought Army today in the mud and whipped the Cadets, 3 to 0, for the first time since 1921 in the annual football battle between the rival service academies. A 19-yard field goal from place- ment, in the first period by Slade Cutter, Navy's star tackle, furnished the margin of victory as a capacity crowd of 80,000 looked on. Led by the sensational Fred (Buzz) Borries, All-America halfback, and Bill Clark, fullback punter, the Mid- shipmen got the jump early in the game as they capitalized their first real scoring opportunity. Then they defended their three-point margin with a magnificent exhibition of de- fensive football on a gridiron that was turned into a quagmire by a tor- rential rain shortly before the game started. Buckler Shackled Jack Buckler, Army ace, was shack- led in the mud. The Cadets made a comeback in the second period with Maurice Simons and Capt. Joe Stan- cook doing the ball-lugging. The best they could do was to reach Navy's 26 after True recovered Clark's fumble on the 35-yard line. The victory was a brilliant climax for Navy's first season under a new graduate coach, Lieut. Thomas J. Hamilton, who returned to Annapolis this year as head coach after gaining a reputation with his handling of Sail- or teams on the West Coast. Borries Bests Buckler The outcome ended a five-game winning streak for the Cadets over their service rivals. West Point was unable to make any headway in the mud and never was inside Navy's 20-yard line. Army's ace back, Jack Buckler, bogged down and was com- pletely overshadowed by Borries, the ground-gaining star of the game, as jwell as by Clark, whose punting put Army in the hole, prepartory to Cut- ter's field goal. Navy had the edge in every . de- partment of play, but conditions were such that neither team made much headway. The Sailors registered three first downs to Army's two, in- tercepted three of West Point's five passes and outrushed the Soldiers, 109 yards to 70. Borries gained 81 yards, including a dash of 22 yards that was the best from scrimmage all day, and played a great defensive game. sotto, ana rancis ;cnmi, , nos But this year our suspicions have first year away from Texas Chris- been further confirmed, for although tain, all sen't teams of the high- we heartily concur with any recogni- est calibre against Michigan this tion which the South obtains, we year. cannot agree with some of the specif- ic instances of that recognition this But what we are unable to agree year. I with is the choice of Southern men That the South in recent years has'1 for at least two positions on the cur- I Irent All-American, for we feel that furnished some of the best football wthAll-Americnyowe fel that in the country can hardly be doubted. with all propriety we could reco- Even considering that other section mend Big Ten representatives for have been handicapped by Conference We rwoerosiiyh rulings to the contrary, the number We refer specifically to the choice of times which Southern teams have of George Barclay of North Carolina at a guard and Bill Wallace of Rice at a halfback. We would suggest for Fisher Nlakesthose positions Bill Bevan of Minne- sota and Jay Berwanger of Chicago. Mr. Gould speaks of Barclay as a guard who would fill the require- ments for hard charging or effective Reduced To 35 blocking" and who could also call, signals or take over the kicking! chores. But, if those are the neces- Coach Ray Fisher announced the Uary characteristics, we could hardly final cut of the freshman basketball conceive of a guard more capable squad yesterday, bringing the num- than Bevan, for it was Bevan's play, ber of players still out down to 35.1 in the middle of the line, as much as Fisher gaid that he would be forced I the work of Lund, Kotska, et al, be- to drop about ten more men from the hind the line, which made the Min- squad later in the season because the nesota juggernaut. squad was still too large to work with. Mr. Gould mentions Bevan as high- All of the practices so far have been ly deserving of second team recogni- at the Waterman Gymnahium, but tion but intimates that it would be since the. Varsity has moved to Yost impossible to give him a first team Field House, the freshmen will finish choice because of the presence of two1 the season. at the Intramural Build- other Gophers, Larson and Lund.! ing. The Ann Arbor High School While Lund could not be kept off1 squad will practice on Waterman floor any All-American team it is our own , until its new gym is completed. opinion that if it were between Lar- Thus far Coach Fisher has spent son and Bevan, the Gopher guard is! most of his time bringing the squad more deserving of mention than the t down to a workable size and as yet big end.f has not decided on his first team. Larson, we feel, has been highly The only man who has shown himself ' over-rated, and members of the Mich-l as definitely above the average is igan squad will support the statement John Townsend, six foot four inch that his .substitute, Maurice John- center, whose ball handling has been son, was much more effective against outstanding. the Wolverines than was Larson. The men retained on the squad in- As for Berwanger, we feel that the' elude Black, Brewer, Barclay, Bevan, Maroon flash who has revived foot- Fishman, Fowdy, Fleetwood, Cush- ball as a major sport at the Chicago: ing, Ghesquiere, Glassmer, Hambur- school. is as deserving of recognition ger, Jones, B. Johnson, Kreger, Val- as any back in the country. For Ber-j pey, King, Lane, Mooney, MacLean,! wanger can do anything and every- Moore, Martin, Newson, Nickerson, thing that a great back should do, and Rinaldo, Shakarian, Slavin, Schul- given the circumstances under which nan, J. Townsend, E. Townsend, Lund has played, his record would, Whitehead, Weid, Wismer, S. Warner, have been as great as even the bril- and Weisenhoff. liant Pug. I John J. Berwanger, Chi. . . H'back John Howell, Alabama . . H'back Izzy Weinstock, Pittsburgh .F'back THIRD TEAM Lawrence Kelley, Yale ......End Slade Cutter, Navy ......Tackle Charles Mucha, Wash. ....Guard Franklin Meier, Nebraska . Center Kenneth Ormiston, Pitts. . .Guard Charles Galbreath, Illinois . Tackle Jc'cph Bogdanski, Colgate . .End Miller Munjas, Pitts......Q'back nichard Hc'kin, Ohio S. . .H'back Claude Simons, Jr., Tulane H'back David Smukler, Temple ..Fullback Among those accorded honorable mention were: Ends - Ed Kle- wicki, Michigan State, and Willis Ward, Michigan. Guard -Sid Wagner, Michigan State. Half- backs - Doug Nott, Detroit, and Kurt Warmbein, Michigan State. QUALITY REPAIR WORK done at John's Tailor Shop "Ann Arb r's Popular Tailor" 609 Packard ! Psi Upsilon Swim TeamMeets A.K.L. Psi Upsilon will meet Alpha Kappa Lambda in the final quarter-final match of the fraternity dual meet swimming tournament at 5:30 p.m. Monday at the Intramural pool. The meet will be a re-swim of the recent one in which the two teams tied, 21-21. The three other quarter-finalists have been determined. Theta Chi will face Pi Lambda in one semi- final meet, while Chi Phi opposes the winner of Monday's Psi Upsilon- Alpha Kappa Lambda meet. The semi- finals will be held next Wednesday. Psi Upsilon is the defending cham- pion. IA L EIGHT LETTERMEN BACK Of the 18 men who won letters last year as members of the Purdue bas- ketball team, eight will return this year. Six of these are major letter- men, while two won minor awards. 'A rA I You ivill finch1 CHRISTMAS GIFTS of PHYSICIANS' BAGS DIAGNOSTIC SETS 11 9 p F V a f l R S(ATFC SEVI cE- $4.95 With Sturdy 2-Color Shoe - Hard Toe A PFAI SPC- AI I m i